1341: Types of Editors

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Types of Editors
m-x machineofdeath-mode
Title text: m-x machineofdeath-mode

Explanation

WYSIWYG, pronounced, "wizz-ee-wig" IPA /ˈwɪziˌwɪg/, is an acronym that stands for "What you see is what you get". In regards to computers, it refers to text editors in which the user can see exactly what will be published as they are typing it. The comic compares various types of editors, each one a play-on-words on WYSIWYG.

  • A WYSIWYG editor displays the edited document in its final form. This could be a printed paper, a WEB page, a PDF document, and more. This is a real term used for text editors.
  • A WYSINWYG editor is the opposite; there is a distinct difference between what the editor displays, and what will be printed. Hence, what you see is not what you get. They are also known as source editors, such as a wiki markup editor or TEX. In the comic an HTML source editor is shown, where you enter raw HTML code and then presented with the rendered appearance of the final page. The <em>-tag marks text that has stress emphasis.
  • The WYSITUTWYG ("... is totally unrelated to ...") editor apparently takes your input and proceeds to ignore it entirely, instead displaying totally unrelated words. Possibly a commentary on the Autocorrect function. Randall seems to have made this term up. The phrase "The HORSE is a noble animal" seems to refer to the Stereotypes of animals#Horses stereotypes commonly associated with horses.
  • WYSIHYD ("... is how you die") shows an "editor" which is not really an editor at all, but rather a pun on the multiple meanings of the word "get": If you see "eaten by wolves", you will get... eaten by wolves. As in physically attacked and devoured by wolves.

The title text is a fictitious command, meta-x machineofdeath-mode, to the highly extensible Emacs text editor. Emacs operates in various "modes", which are customizations for specific purposes. Placing Emacs into "Machine of Death" mode would turn it into a WYSIHYD editor. Another fictitious emacs command can be found in comic 378. "Machine of Death" is a reference to the 2010 book Machine of Death, with Randall Munroe being one of the writers. It is a collection of short stories about a device that can predict how people die from a drop of their blood. In many of the stories very unusual deaths are predicted, often in a very literal way.

Transcript

[There are four panels, each with different headings over them.]
[The first panel shows two titled text boxes, one above the other.]
WYSIWYG What you see is what you get
[Upper text box title] What you see:
Hi
[Lower text box title] What you get:
Hi
[The second panel shows two titled text boxes, one above the other, the same as the first box.]
WYSINWYG What you see is not what you get
[Upper text box title] What you see:
<em>Hi</em>
[Lower text box title] What you get:
Hi
[The third panel is presented the same as the first two.]
WYSITUTWYG What you see is totally unrelated to what you get
[Upper text box title] What you see:
<em>Hi</em>
[Lower text box title] What you get:
The HORSE is a noble animal.
[The fourth panel shows two titled text areas, (which are not outlined with a border), one above the other.]
WYSIHYD What you see is how you die
[Upper text area title] What you see:
[White text on a black background] EATEN BY WOLVES
[Lower text area] What you get:
Eaten by wolves

Trivia

  • "The horse is a noble animal" is the name of a giant rocking-horse sculpture in Yorkshire.


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Discussion

The horse is a noble animal; refers to this? http://www.marciafarquhar.com/artwork/the-horse-is-a-noble-animal/ --NSDCars5 (talk) 13:40, 14 March 2014 (UTC)NSDCars5

Title text and last frame are a reference to the book "Machine of Death", a collection of short stories in which a machine can tell a person a word, that is in some way related to how they will die. 173.245.53.198 (talk) (please sign your comments with ~~~~)

Incidentally, Munroe himself wrote a story in that anthology. Apparently, it was titled "?" Has anyone read it?199.27.128.108 08:14, 12 March 2014 (UTC)

SPOILER ALERT In the machine of death story from Randal the protagonist struggles with the fact the machine can predict death, it does not fit his world picture. He decides the only way to win is not to play so he never reads his slip of paper and goes to work starting fires to form an huge question mark. In the end he decides to stay in one place to ether die there from hunger and thirst or any other way. He hopes the slip of paper says "murder" instead of anything else as in the machine murdered him. /SPOILER ALERT 62.177.168.231 (talk) (please sign your comments with ~~~~)

There are also WYSIWYM editors: "what you see is what you mean", where editor marks the content according to its meaning (e.g. section title), but not necessarily exactly as it would appear in presentation. The main advantage of this system is the total separation of presentation and content. Examples include LyX, FrameMaker, WYMeditor, CodeMirror. --JakubNarebski (talk) 08:44, 12 March 2014 (UTC)

And let's not forget WYGIWYG (wiggywig), "What you get is what you get" A joking reference to the imperfection of certain well-known word processors. At this moment, someone out there is writing a machineofdeath-mode for Emacs. Jim E (talk) 16:07, 12 March 2014 (UTC)

Anyone know that "horse" reference? It sounds familiar but I can't place it. 108.162.216.9 16:34, 12 March 2014 (UTC)

I don't know if it's relevant, but there's a sculpture titled "The Horse is a Noble Animal". [1][2] Wwoods (talk) 19:18, 12 March 2014 (UTC)

What about Death Note? Sounds a bit like WYSIHYD is a nerfed version of the Death Note. --108.162.215.8 17:12, 12 March 2014 (UTC)

It's just a correlation. 108.162.237.64 17:16, 12 March 2014 (UTC)
Are you Randall? If not, you do not know that. 108.162.249.215 01:53, 13 March 2014 (UTC)
I vote to add a reference in a Trivia section, as I've seen Trivias here deviating that much. 108.162.219.125 04:34, 1 March 2015 (UTC)

I think this needs an incomplete flag. It doesn't make a clear distinction between the comic and the real-world context, and the latter isn't sufficiently explained. --Mynotoar (talk) 18:15, 12 March 2014 (UTC)

Was my indentation of the transcript too much? I thought it added to the understanding of the layout and flow. Jarod997 (talk) 12:38, 13 March 2014 (UTC)

I can't believe that no one has made a WYSITUTWYG editor on the internet yet, given that there are already hell tetris machines. Hppavilion1 (talk) 04:22, 14 August 2014 (UTC)

WYSIHYD reminds me of the "goto" programmer getting attacked by a velociraptor http://www.explainxkcd.com/wiki/index.php/292 108.162.238.182 18:20, 16 May 2015 (UTC)

HORSE reference

Preeeeeeeeetty certain this refers to the briefly famous, rather bizarre "Horse eBooks" twitter account which was presumably set up as some kind of Markov-chain based quotation engine intended to promote the service by spewing out famous phrases from the books in their collection, but instead ended up generating all kinds of amusing nonsense, much of it on the subject of equines. It may or may not still be operating ... I don't twitter much, so finding out will take a moment or two... (gets curious, actually checks)

...well, it's still there, but it hasn't updated in a while: [[3]] ... 141.101.98.150 09:08, 20 May 2015 (UTC)

Given the nature of Horse_ebooks and the fact that xkcd has referenced it before (under "Twitter"), I think this is certainly possible. (The above-stated reference to the statue could simultaneously be true.) L-Space Traveler (talk) 01:50, 18 February 2023 (UTC)


I just put together this comic in real life. LINK: http://1314.fluffycraft.net/ Check it out!!!! 162.158.72.35 03:21, 20 April 2016 (UTC) Gus

How I pronouce them: wizz-ee-wig wizz-en-wig wizz-etut-wig wizz-ee-hid Awoo is legal | (you can't) change my mind (talk) 22:09, 2 October 2018 (UTC)